Make it so TLO, how would we go about that sort of thing?
This is the strange "connection" fellow Albion lifers feel.
I never shared a beer with Roy, may or may not have had a couple of conversations with him at some hovel of an away trip, and certainly wouldn't be able to call him a personal friend. BUT ...
... he's one of those faces, one of those fans, that you've just seen around the place, going such a long way back, through good times and bad. I've read his numerous articles down the years, I've heard him interviewed, and know plenty about all he did to get the club to where we are now. All of that adds up to a feeling that I have lost a good friend.
There's something just in the look we all share with familiar faces that says "we've both been through a lot at the Albion." Words aren't always necessary.
RIP Roy. We all owe you a lot.
This is the strange "connection" fellow Albion lifers feel.
I never shared a beer with Roy, may or may not have had a couple of conversations with him at some hovel of an away trip, and certainly wouldn't be able to call him a personal friend. BUT ...
... he's one of those faces, one of those fans, that you've just seen around the place, going such a long way back, through good times and bad. I've read his numerous articles down the years, I've heard him interviewed, and know plenty about all he did to get the club to where we are now. All of that adds up to a feeling that I have lost a good friend.
There's something just in the look we all share with familiar faces that says "we've both been through a lot at the Albion." Words aren't always necessary.
RIP Roy. We all owe you a lot.
Suggestion for a tribute -
Have Dark Star and/or Harvey's brew a special ale in Roy Chuter's memory and have it available at Dick's Bar/Evening Star etc...?
Some great posts on this thread but that is the best, an absolutely brilliant post. Over my first wave of grief now but obviously I've been thinking about him all morning. I remember him showing me that letter from Belotti's solicitors in the Prince Albert. I asked him what he was going to do, thinking he might say he'd taken legal advice or something. "I'm going to rip the piss out of it" he replied.A powerful reason for the ultimate success of the supporters' campaign for a new stadium was people like Roy Chuter. He was in at the start, raging against the boardroom from the Goldstone terraces. His trade was writing and he became a star attraction of Gulls Eye, reputation sealed with that hilarious letter he wrote to David Bellotti's solicitors, who had threatened to sue him. It remains the funniest piece of satire in a whole decade of campaigning.
It was every man for himself in those early days of campaigning - people used to rock up on a Saturday afternoon with whatever idea they'd dreamt up in the week. An individualist, Roy probably enjoyed this first stage of the stadium struggle more than the later ones. Even so, he linked arms with people like Ian Hart, Paul Samrah and his best friend John Baine to get the snowball rolling in those desperate early days. Without them, there might have been no later days, no Bring Home the Albion or Falmer For All campaigns, no 30,000-seat stadium, perhaps no Albion itself.
Later on, after the men in the white hats had taken control of the club, he felt it safe, with other honourable people, to move from poacher to gamekeeper. He edited the programme in those hand-to-mouth days when everyone from the printers down got used to waiting six months or more for bills to be settled, understanding the terrible lack of cashflow and doing what they could to keep the club floating.
He'd lost more than one huge Albion fan from his own family and one of his great wishes was that there should be a garden of remembrance at the stadium. He helped win that battle and he helped win another one too - that there should be real ale on tap at the Amex. There is perhaps only one way to toast him when we're next in the ground.
A loveable, gentle man, Roy Chuter was a convinced atheist. Right now, let's hope he was mistaken.
This is the strange "connection" fellow Albion lifers feel.
I never shared a beer with Roy, may or may not have had a couple of conversations with him at some hovel of an away trip, and certainly wouldn't be able to call him a personal friend. BUT ...
... he's one of those faces, one of those fans, that you've just seen around the place, going such a long way back, through good times and bad. I've read his numerous articles down the years, I've heard him interviewed, and know plenty about all he did to get the club to where we are now. All of that adds up to a feeling that I have lost a good friend.
There's something just in the look we all share with familiar faces that says "we've both been through a lot at the Albion." Words aren't always necessary.
RIP Roy. We all owe you a lot.